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Voting With No Confidence

As the number of faculty votes of dissatisfaction with university administrators rises, the influence of such votes seems to wane.

A Public Mimics Its Private Peers

New financing policy at William & Mary embraces “high tuition/high aid” model, while emphasizing middle class affordability and investing in academic quality.
Opinion

A Better Factory Model

The factory production model can work as a means for evaluating community college efficiency, write Clive Belfield and Davis Jenkins.

A Rare Washington Compromise?

At a Senate hearing, Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Republicans suggest they could find common ground on changing student loan interest rates to a market-based formula.

Big Disruption, Big Questions

Possible end game for competency-based education emerges with five new "direct assessment" programs, as foundations and experts discuss how to ensure academic quality.

And So It Begins

With concurrent hearings, Congress takes the first tentative steps toward reauthorizing the Higher Education Act.

Expert Testimony Restored

A federal appeals court finds a lower court should not have excluded expert testimony in a case in which a student sued her college for negligence.

Taxing International Student Tuition

In Washington state, legislators propose a 20 percent surcharge on international student tuition. The universities worry that students will stop coming.